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Indonesia: bad weather impedes search following North Sumatra boat accident Indonesia: 180 missing after overloaded boat sinks in Sumatra
(1 day later)
At least one person has died and dozens are missing after a boat carrying 80 people capsized on Monday in Indonesia, an official from the national disaster agency said. Indonesian officials have confirmed that at least 178 people are missing from a ferry sinking early this week at a popular lake on Sumatra, many more than previously believed.
The vessel overturned in Lake Toba in the province of North Sumatra, more than 1,300km (800 miles) north-west of the capital, Jakarta. Distraught relatives pleaded on Wednesday for a bigger search effort and angrily criticised the government’s failure to enforce even basic safety measures on passenger boats.
“Six passengers have been rescued, one is dead,” said national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho. The wooden vessel, overcrowded with passengers as well as dozens of motorbikes, didn’t have a manifest. Originally, 80 people were declared missing and disaster officials have several times increased the number of people it was carrying as family members who rushed to Lake Toba in northern Sumatra provided information.
Authorities have deployed rescue vessels and the search is ongoing, but bad weather is hindering the operation. Only 18 survivors were found in the hours after the boat sank on Monday evening, during bad weather. It’s possible many of the victims were still inside the sunken ferry, said North Sumatra province police chief Paulus Waterpau.
Indonesia has been celebrating the Islamic festival of Eid since Friday when millions go on holiday, with Lake Toba a popular tourist destination. “Many survivors told authorities that less than half of them had jumped into the water before the boat sank,” he told The Associated Press.
The sinking is the latest in a string of deadly maritime accidents in the vast Indonesian archipelago, which relies heavily on boats to ferry people around its 17,000 islands, but has a poor safety record. Suwarni, whose 20-year-old son and his girlfriend were on the ferry, slammed the search and rescue operation as slow and insufficient.
Last week, a traditional wooden boat with about 40 people capsized near the island of Sulawesi, killing more than a dozen people. “Millions of questions keep me from sleeping,” she said. “Why a boat for just 50 people is allowed to be loaded with almost 200 people plus dozens of motorcycles,” said Suwarni, who uses one name.
“What kind of government is this that can’t protect their own people from unnecessary accidents? And after the accident they’re not able to find the victims,” she said. “I beg help to everyone to quickly find my son and his girlfriend, even if their remains, please find my son, return him to me.”
Divers were searching at depths of 25 meters (82 feet) and will deploy an underwater drone to 200 meters (656 feet) below the surface, Waterpau said. The 1,145-square-kilometer (440-square-mile) Lake Toba, formed out of an ancient super volcano, is a popular sightseeing destination on the island of Sumatra. It is more than 400 meters (1,312 feet) deep.
The search and rescue effort involving 350 personnel and at least half a dozen boats has turned up items of clothing, bags and traces of oil from the ferry but only a few victims.
Hisar Turnit, a spokesman for the search and rescue agency in nearby Medan, said three deaths were now confirmed after two more bodies were found on Wednesday morning.
A grief-stricken Muhaimin, 61, said he had lost eight members of his family including two sons, their wives and children.
“My sons, my daughter-in-laws and my grandchildren have been the victims of greedy businessmen who just want to take advantage of the holiday season without thinking of people’s safety,” he said. “It would not happen if they follow the rules. But they made money over our misery.”
Cellphone video released earlier in the week by the National Disaster Mitigation Agency showed the crew of another ferry attempting to rescue people struggling in the waters shortly after the sinking but being hampered by bad weather and rough waters.
The disaster has cast a tragic pall over holidays marking the end of Ramadan when tens of millions of Indonesians return to their hometowns.
Ferry tragedies are common in Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands, with weak enforcement of safety regulations often to blame. Last week, a traditional wooden boat with about 40 people capsized near the island of Sulawesi, killing more than a dozen people.
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